The world’s rarest whale Kirsten Thompson, C. Scott Baker, Anton van Helden, Selina Patel, Craig Millar, Rochelle Constantine Current Biology Volume 22, Issue 21, Pages R905-R906 (November 2012) DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2012.08.055 Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions
Figure 1 Location, species identification and morphology of the spade-toothed beaked whale (Mesoplodon traversii). (A) Location of partial skulls found on the Chatham and White Islands, New Zealand, on Robinson Crusoe Island, Chile (red squares) and the two recently stranded specimens discovered on Opape Beach, New Zealand (black circle). (B) Neighbour-joining tree of control region and cytochrome b sequences from ziphiid species and the two Opape specimens (MtrNZ03 and MtrNZ04) group in a monophyletic clade (green box). Higher-level relationships within the blue shading are not well resolved. Bootstrap values are shown as percentages for a total of 1000 bootstrap replicates. The vertical bars denote several specimens included in the analysis. Scientific names are as follows: 1: Hyperoodon ampullatus; 2: H. planifrons; 3: M. mirus; 4: M. europaeus; 5: Ziphius cavirostris; 6: M. bidens; 7: M. layardii; 8: M. hectori; 9: Tasmacetus shepherdi; 10: Indopacetus pacificus; 11: M. ginkgodens; 12: M. bowdoini; 13: M. peruvianus; 14: M. perrini; 15: M. grayi; 16: M. stejnegeri; 17: M. densirostris; 18: M. carlhubbsi; 19: Berardius arnuxii; 20: B. bairdii; 21: Kogia breviceps. (C) Illustration depicting a generalized external morphology derived from photographs of the adult female spade-toothed beaked whale (see supplemental information for photographs). Current Biology 2012 22, R905-R906DOI: (10.1016/j.cub.2012.08.055) Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions